{"slug": "llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere-in-2026", "title": "LLC for Digital Nomads: How to Set Up a US LLC From Anywhere in 2026", "summary": "Digital nomads can form a US LLC remotely without a US address or SSN, gaining access to payment processors like Stripe and US banking through fintechs. Wyoming, Delaware, and New Mexico are top state choices, each with distinct trade-offs. The structure offers liability protection and professional legitimacy but may not reduce tax obligations in high-tax home countries.", "body_md": "# LLC for Digital Nomads: How to Set Up a US LLC From Anywhere in 2026\n\nApproved by Tax Professional\n\nA complete formation-to-compliance guide for location-independent entrepreneurs\n\n## Can a Digital Nomad Form a US LLC?\n\nYes, an LLC for digital nomads can be formed regardless of nationality or country of residence, without needing a US address, an SSN, or even an ITIN. Any non-US individual or a global entrepreneur can file Articles of Organization in a US state, obtain an EIN, and open a US business bank account entirely remotely.\n\n- Choose your formation state (Wyoming, Delaware, or New Mexico for most nomads).\n- Appoint a US-based registered agent with a physical address in that state.\n- File your Articles of Organization with the state Secretary of State.\n- Obtain an EIN (Employer Identification Number) from the IRS for free via Form SS-4.\n- Open a US business banking account with a fintech company like Slash or Relay.\n\nOnce your LLC is active, you’ll gain access to US payment processors like Stripe, PayPal, and Gumroad, real USD banking, and a professional US business entity that can be used for client contracts, invoicing, and global business operations.\n\n## Why Digital Nomads Choose a US LLC (And When It Makes Sense)\n\nYou have already decided that [a US LLC is the right move](https://www.doola.com/start-business/). Here is exactly why that decision holds up, and the one scenario where it needs a second look.\n\n### The Four Reasons That Actually Matter\n\n**Payment processors that work globally.** Stripe, PayPal, and Gumroad reliably process payments for US LLCs. As a foreign individual or entity based outside the US, getting approved for these platforms is significantly harder. A US LLC removes that barrier.\n\n**Real US banking without a US address.** Fintech companies like Slash and Relay open accounts for properly formed LLCs, not for foreign individuals. Section 6 covers exactly how this works.\n\n**Professional legitimacy with clients.** A US entity on your contracts and invoices signals stability and permanence to US and Canadian clients. It also[simplifies W-8BEN-E (the IRS form](https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw8bene.pdf)US clients use to classify your entity’s foreign ownership for withholding purposes) classification during onboarding.\n\n**Liability separation.** Your personal assets stay legally separate from your business. If a client dispute escalates, your LLC absorbs the exposure, not your personal bank account.\n\n### When A US LLC is *NOT *The Right Fit\n\nIf your home country taxes worldwide income aggressively, such as the United States, the UK, or Germany, the pass-through income (profit that flows directly to your personal tax return, since the LLC itself pays no federal income tax) from your US LLC flows directly to your personal return in that country. The LLC structure itself does not reduce that obligation.\n\nThe tax picture for nomads depends heavily on tax residency, income type, and existing treaties.\n\nHowever, compared to a sole proprietorship, a foreign entity, or a C-Corp, a US LLC offers a more suitable digital nomad business structure if you need liability protection and reliable access to payment infrastructure without unnecessary complexity.\n\nSole proprietorships expose you personally to risk, foreign entities often struggle with US fintech access, and C-Corps are typically an overkill unless you’re raising venture capital.\n\n**🔖 Related Reading:** *Navigating the World of Digital Nomad Taxes: A Comprehensive Guide*\n\n## Which State Should a Digital Nomad Choose? (Wyoming vs. Delaware vs. New Mexico)\n\nAsk ten digital nomads where they formed their LLC, and you’ll hear the same three states come up again and again: Wyoming, Delaware, and New Mexico, with Florida occasionally entering the list as a fourth contender.\n\nEach state solves the same problem in a slightly different way, and has a distinct trade-off too.\n\nHere’s how they compare:\n\n| Feature | Wyoming | Delaware | New Mexico | Florida |\n|---|---|---|---|---|\n| Annual Report Required(a periodic state filing confirming your LLC is active and in good standing) | Yes (annual) | Franchise tax only; minimum $300 due by June 1 (no annual report). | No | Yes (annual) |\n| State Income Tax on Pass-Through | None | None | None | None |\n| Formation Fee | $100 | $110 | $50 | $125 |\n| Banking-Friendly Track Record | Strong | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |\n\n**Note: **Delaware charges a [flat $300 annual franchise tax](https://www.doola.com/blog/delaware-franchise-tax-what-you-need-to-know/) due June 1, separate from your formation fee. Unlike corporations, LLCs owe the same $300 regardless of shares, revenue, or activity level.\n\n**🔖 Related Reading: *** Top 5 Best States to Open an LLC as a Foreigner*\n\n### The Recommendation: Best US State for Digital Nomads\n\nThe best US state for digital nomads combines four things that matter most for location-independent entrepreneurs:\n\nWyoming LLC for digital nomads is the default and most balanced choice for the majority.\n\n- No state income tax on pass-through income via LLC\n\n- A low and simple compliance structure (annual reporting, due the first day of your LLC’s anniversary month)\n\n- Lower formation and maintenance costs\n\n- Strong reputation with US fintechs and payment processors\n\nIn practice, Wyoming is the “set it and forget it” jurisdiction in the US LLC ecosystem. It is widely accepted by [platforms like Stripe](https://www.doola.com/go-stripeatlas/) and PayPal, works smoothly with fintech banking providers, and avoids the administrative noise that often slows down remote entrepreneurs.\n\nIf your priority is absolute minimal ongoing compliance, **New Mexico can be attractive**. It stands out for having no annual report requirement, which reduces administrative overhead for entrepreneurs who want the simplest maintenance structure. However, it has a less established track record with some banking and fintech workflows compared to Wyoming.\n\nNow if you’re on a venture capital trajectory, Delaware becomes the most strategic choice. The [Delaware Court of Chancery is highly respected](https://courts.delaware.gov/chancery/) in corporate law, and most US investors are familiar with Delaware structures. That familiarity comes at a cost, with the annual **franchise tax exceeding $300+** regardless of revenue, making it less ideal for** lean, independent operators.**\n\nFinally, Florida offers no meaningful advantages for digital nomads. While it has no state income tax, it doesn’t simplify compliance or improve banking access compared to Wyoming, making it more of a geographic choice than a strategic one.\n\nNew Mexico minimizes maintenance, Delaware serves the fundraising crowd, and Florida sits in the middle, but Wyoming offers the cleanest path from formation to banking, payments, and long-term compliance.\n\nAnd that balance is exactly why Wyoming continues to be the go-to jurisdiction for most digital nomads forming a US LLC today.\n\nNow, if you’re setting up your business from anywhere in the world and want the least friction path from formation to operations, Wyoming is **hands down the best state to form an LLC as a digital nomad.**\n\n[Start your Wyoming LLC formation with doola →](https://www.doola.com/llc/wyoming/)\n\n## The US Address Problem (and How Registered Agents Solve It)\n\nEvery US state requires an LLC to have a physical US address on file for official government and legal correspondence. A PO box does not count. If you have no US address, this sounds like a hard stop. It is not.\n\nA **registered agent** is the person or service with a physical US address in your formation state who receives official legal and government mail on behalf of your LLC. The registered agent’s address is your LLC’s official address on the Articles of Organization, the EIN application, and all state filings. You do not need to own, rent, or even visit any property in the US yourself.\n\nThis is the single most important structural fact for nomad LLC formation: your entire US address requirement is solved by appointing a registered agent service at the time you file.\n\n### Your US Address Stack\n\n| Address Type | What It Is Used For |\n|---|---|\n| Registered Agent Address | Official state filings, legal notices, Articles of Organization, IRS EIN application |\n| Business Mailing Address | Client correspondence, invoices, general business mail |\n| Virtual Mailbox | Package forwarding, physical mail scanning, US presence for some banking applications |\n\nThe registered agent handles the legally required address. For general business correspondence that clients or vendors might send, virtual mailbox services ([such as Virtual Post Mail](https://www.doola.com/go-virtualpostmail/), Anytime Mailbox, PostScan Mail, or Traveling Mailbox) can provide a real US street address with digital mail scanning.\n\nSome banks and payment processors also look more favorably at applicants who have a virtual mailbox address that matches their state of formation.\n\n[Set up your registered agent through doola](https://www.doola.com/products/registered-agent/) and get a US address for your LLC today.\n\n## How to Get an EIN Without a Social Security Number\n\nAn **EIN (Employer Identification Number)** is the nine-digit tax ID the IRS assigns to your LLC. It is the US equivalent of a company tax registration number and is required for opening a business bank account, filing federal taxes, and hiring contractors, in the **format**:** XX-XXXXXXX.**\n\nHere is the part most guides tend to simply gloss over: the standard IRS online EIN application at irs.gov is only available to applicants with a US Social Security Number (SSN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN).\n\nIf you are a non-resident entrepreneur without either, the online tool will reject your application. So instead, you need to [apply using Form SS-4](https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fss4.pdf), submitted through “international fax” or ‘phone’.\n\n### The Fax Method (Most Common)\n\n**Download Form SS-4** from IRS.gov.**Complete the form:** Line 7b in the form is critical for non-residents: enter “N/A” if you have no SSN or ITIN, then include a brief explanation note. Line 1 should be your LLC’s legal name. Line 8a should be “LLC” and then Line 9a should have your ‘member count’.**Fax the completed form:** Fax the completed form to the IRS EIN International Operation. Use 304-707-9471 if you are physically located outside the US at the time of filing, or 855-215-1627 if you are physically inside the US but applying as an international applicant without an SSN or ITIN.**Wait for processing:** Faxed EIN applications are generally processed within approximately**4 business days**, although processing times can vary depending on application volume and IRS backlogs.\n\n**Note:** Include a return fax number so the IRS can send your EIN assignment notice back to you. Online fax services are generally accepted and are commonly used by **global entrepreneurs**.\n\nThe correct fax number depends on your physical location at the time of filing, not your country of citizenship or LLC formation state. Double-check before sending, because routing to the wrong number can delay processing.\n\nThe written EIN confirmation letter (which banks require for account opening) can take 4-6 weeks to arrive by mail. Your banking timeline runs from receipt of the letter, not the IRS assignment date.\n\n### The Phone Method (Faster When Lines Are Available)\n\nNon-residents can apply for an EIN by calling the IRS EIN International Applicant line at **267-941-1099**. During the call, an IRS representative will review the information [included in Form SS-4](https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fss4.pdf) and, in many cases, can assign an EIN right after verifying all the application details.\n\nAvailability and wait times vary based on IRS staffing and call volume. Some entrepreneurs prefer “fax method” because it avoids** hold times **and scheduling challenges across time zones.\n\nOne common mistake here is submitting the Form SS-4 with incomplete ownership information or incorrectly classifying the LLC structure. Even some **minor errors **can delay your processing.\n\ndoola handles EIN filing as part of its formation packages, helping ensure your application is **completed accurately** and submitted through the appropriate **IRS **channels right from the start.\n\n## Opening a US Bank Account for Your Digital Nomad LLC\n\nTraditional US banks, including Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo, require in-person branch visits and typically a US address or SSN. For a nomad who has never set foot in a US branch, that used to be a dead end. Fintech banks have changed this entirely.\n\nThe four providers below support many non-resident LLC owners and offer remote application processes. Eligibility varies by country of residence, citizenship, business activity, and compliance requirements.\n\n| Provider | Non-Resident Accepted | Notable Exclusions | KYC Requirements | Stripe + PayPal Compatible |\n|---|---|---|---|---|\n| Slash | Yes | Does not currently support entrepreneurs residing in certain restricted or sanctioned jurisdictions.\n|\n\n[Relay’s current eligibility documentation →](https://support.relayfi.com/hc/en-us/articles/10239600121748-Prohibited-Countries)Relay also restricts certain international wire and payment features for some jurisdictions, including China and other high-risk regions.[Wise Business official list of restricted countries →](https://wise.com/help/articles/2977974/can-my-business-use-wise)[Payoneer’s guide to global sanctions lists →](https://www.payoneer.com/en-in/resources/business/guide-to-global-sanctions-lists/)### What You Will Need To Apply\n\n- Formed LLC (Articles of Organization stamped by the Secretary of State)\n\n- EIN confirmation letter from the IRS\n\n- Passport (valid and not expired)\n\n- Certified Operating Agreement (most banks require this; doola provides a standard template at formation). It is a legally binding foundational contract that outlines the ownership structure, member roles, and operational guidelines for a limited liability company LLC.\n\n**📌 Important note:** You must have your EIN before opening a bank account. Since EIN processing via fax takes 4 to 6 weeks, plan your full timeline as 6 to 8 weeks from filing Articles of Organization to having a live bank account. Do not file your LLC and then immediately try to open a bank account because the EIN will not be ready.\n\ndoola facilitates Slash and Relay introductions as part of its formation packages, which means your bank application goes to a partner-led process rather than the standard cold queue.\n\n[Set up US banking for your LLC through doola → ](https://www.doola.com/go-slash-banking/)\n\n## Annual Compliance: What Your LLC Owes Every Year\n\nFor digital nomads, the real challenge begins after formation. Unlike a traditional business owner with a fixed office, you are managing compliance while moving between countries, time zones, and tax jurisdictions.\n\nForming your LLC is a milestone, but definitely not the finish line.\n\nAnd missing a filing deadline can cause your LLC to fall out of good standing with the state, create issues with banking partners, disrupt payment processor relationships, and trigger avoidable penalties.\n\nHowever, once you understand the timeline, annual compliance becomes a straightforward checklist rather than a source of stress.\n\nHere is what your LLC owes, and when.\n\n### Year 1 milestone timeline:\n\n**Formation day:** Articles of Organization filed, registered agent appointed, operating agreement drafted. The operating agreement is the internal document governing how your LLC is owned and managed. Without one, your LLC operates under your state’s default rules, which are rarely set up for a single-member nomad structure.\n\n**Within 90 days:** EIN obtained (or in progress via fax), US bank account opened, basic accounting setup in place (a simple spreadsheet or a tool like Wave or QuickBooks is sufficient to start).\n\n**Note: **BOI reporting for US-formed LLCs was suspended under FinCEN’s March 2025 interim final rule. Verify current requirements at fincen.gov before advising any filing.\n\n### End of Year 1 and beyond, by state:\n\n**✔️ Wyoming**\n\nAnnual report due on the first day of your LLC’s anniversary month. $60 minimum filing fee or $0.0002 per dollar of assets located in Wyoming, whichever is greater.** **\n\nReporting requirements are straightforward, fees are relatively low, and the filing typically requires only basic company information. For most nomad LLCs with no Wyoming-based physical assets, this is simply $60/year.\n\n**✔️ Delaware**\n\nFlat $300 franchise tax due by June 1 each year. No separate annual report required for LLCs. Late payment triggers a $200 penalty plus 1.5% monthly interest.\n\n**✔️ New Mexico**\n\nNo annual report required. The cleanest ongoing compliance profile of the three main nomad states.\n\n### Two Compliance Obligations Digital Nomads Consistently Overlook\n\nBy this stage, you understand your state’s reporting requirements. What often gets overlooked are the federal filings that operate quietly in the background until a missed deadline turns into an expensive legal issue.\n\nThese are the main obligations that deserve your attention from** day 1. **\n\n**FBAR (Foreign Bank Account Report, FinCEN Form 114)**\n\nIf you have foreign financial accounts with an aggregate value exceeding $10,000 at any point during the calendar year, you must [file an FBAR with FinCEN](https://www.fincen.gov/system/files/shared/FBARE-FileAuth114aRecordSP.pdf) by April 15 (with automatic extension to October).\n\nMissing it can carry civil **penalties **and, in willful cases, **criminal exposure**.\n\n**Form 5472**\n\nIf your LLC is foreign-owned (meaning 25% or more ownership by a non-US person), it must [file Form 5472 with the IRS](https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f5472.pdf) annually as part of a pro-forma Form 1120.\n\nThe penalty for failure to file is $25,000 per year per form. This is not a hypothetical fine that gets waived. The IRS actively enforces it, so make sure you file it at the beginning, without any delay.\n\ndoola tracks every deadline above and files on your behalf as part of its annual Tax and Compliance service, so nothing slips through because you were in a different time zone when the calendar turned.\n\n[Let doola manage your annual compliance →](https://www.doola.com/tax-filing/)\n\n## Taxes on a US LLC for Digital Nomads (What You Actually Need to Know)\n\nOne structural fact governs everything about how a US LLC is taxed: the LLC itself does not pay US federal income tax.\n\nThe goal here is not to turn you into a tax expert, but to give you enough context to understand how US LLC taxes work.\n\nAs always, doola is not a tax advisor, and your tax obligations should be assessed based on your individual situation and where you live and work.\n\n### The Core Structural Fact: Pass-Through Taxation\n\nA US LLC is a pass-through entity by default. The LLC itself doesn’t pay US federal income tax. The income flows through the individual members and is reported on their **personal **tax returns.\n\nFor US-resident owners, income flows to [Schedule C of Form 1040](https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040sc.pdf). For non-resident foreign owners, the LLC files a pro-forma Form 1120 plus Form 5472 annually to report the entity and related-party transactions. There is no ‘international equivalent’ of Schedule C.\n\n### ECI and When US Federal Tax Applies to Non-Residents\n\nThe key concept here is **ECI (Effectively Connected Income)**. ECI is the IRS category for income that is considered connected to a US trade or business. If your [LLC’s income qualifies as ECI](https://www.doola.com/blog/effectively-connected-income-eci/), you owe US federal income tax on it as a non-resident.\n\nWhether your specific income qualifies is a facts-and-circumstances test that depends on what services you perform, where you perform them, and what your clients are paying for.\n\n### State Income Tax: Formation State vs. Taxable State\n\nWyoming, New Mexico, and South Dakota have no state income tax on pass-through income. Delaware imposes a state income tax.\n\nIf your LLC earns income attributable to a state with income tax, you may owe state returns even if you formed in a zero-tax state.\n\n**What this article will not answer:**\n\n- Your home country’s treatment of US LLC pass-through income\n- Whether you qualify for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE)\n- Tax treaty application between the US and your country of tax residence\n- Self-employment tax obligations as a non-resident member\n\n**For answers to those questions, read the following doola guides:**\n\n→ [Top 10 Low-Tax Countries for Digital Nomads](https://www.doola.com/blog/top-10-low-tax-countries-for-digital-nomads/)\n\n→ [Navigating the World of Digital Nomad Taxes: A Comprehensive Guide](https://www.doola.com/blog/navigating-the-world-of-digital-nomad-taxes-a-comprehensive-guide/)\n\n## How doola Handles the Full Formation Stack for Digital Nomads in 2026\n\nThe challenge isn’t learning the steps. It’s managing all of them across different providers, systems, and deadlines while running a business from multiple countries.\n\nHere is how doola helps you if yours is a [US LLC for non-residents](https://www.doola.com/blog/llc-for-non-us-residents/):\n\n**State selection:** doola’s team helps you pick Wyoming, Delaware, or New Mexico based on your specific situation, not a generic recommendation.\n\n**Articles of Organization:** Filed on your behalf with the Secretary of State. You provide the information; doola handles the paperwork and tracks confirmation.\n\n**Registered agent:** doola provides a registered agent in your formation state, giving you the required physical US address for your LLC from day 1.\n\n**EIN:** doola prepares and submits Form SS-4 for non-resident applicants, handling line 7b and the fax submission so your EIN arrives correctly the first time.\n\n**Operating agreement:** doola provides a standard[operating agreement template](https://www.doola.com/products/operating-agreement/)drafted for LLCs, covering ownership, management, and the provisions that banks look for during KYC.\n\n**US bank account:** doola facilitates[introductions to Slash](https://www.doola.com/go-slash-banking/)and Relay, giving your application a warm channel and improving your odds of approval.\n\n**Annual compliance:** doola helps with annual reports, tracks FBAR deadlines, and Form 5472 requirements on your behalf as part of its Tax and Compliance plan.\n\nUnlike single-step filing services in the US, doola doesn’t just hand you the documents and disappear. Our platform is built as a formation-to-compliance stack, which means you are not starting over every time a new obligation comes due.\n\nIf you’re ready to get your LLC up and running, you’re one click away from forming one with doola. [Start your LLC formation →](https://www.doola.com/start-business/)\n\nWant to compare our available packages first? [See what’s included in doola’s formation plans →](https://www.doola.com/pricing/)\n\nWherever you’re working from next month, your **business foundation will already be in place. **\n\n## FAQs\n\n### Can I form a US LLC without visiting the United States?\n\nYes, the entire LLC formation process can be completed remotely. You can file the Articles of Organization through your state’s online portal or through a [formation service like doola](https://www.doola.com/start-business/).\n\n### Does a Wyoming LLC pay state income tax?\n\nNo, Wyoming has no state income tax, which means pass-through income from your Wyoming LLC is not subject to Wyoming state income tax.\n\nYou may still owe federal income tax depending on whether your income qualifies as ECI.\n\n### How long does LLC formation take?\n\nWyoming standard processing is 3 to 15 business days. Expedited processing is available and typically completes in 1 to 3 business days.\n\nAdd 4 to 6 weeks for IRS EIN processing via fax. Plan ~6-8 weeks, from filing your Articles of Organization to having a live EIN and bank account.\n\n### Do I need a US phone number?\n\nNo, a US phone number is not required for LLC formation. For banking KYC, most fintechs accept international phone numbers.\n\nGoogle Voice numbers are generally accepted by banks during the KYC process [as a US contact number](https://www.doola.com/go-quo/) if you prefer to provide one, but verify this directly with your bank, as acceptance policies vary.\n\n### What is an operating agreement and do I need one?\n\nAn **operating agreement** is the internal document governing how your LLC is owned and managed. Most states don’t legally require one for single-member LLCs, but every bank needs it for KYC during opening an account.\n\n[doola provides a standard operating agreement template](https://www.doola.com/products/operating-agreement/) as part of its formation packages.", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere-in-2026", "canonical_source": "https://www.doola.com/blog/llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere/", "published_at": "2026-06-22 12:07:14+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-24 15:44:10.748459+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["ai-tools", "ai-products", "ai-startups", "developer-tools", "ai-infrastructure"], "entities": ["Stripe", "PayPal", "Gumroad", "Slash", "Relay", "IRS", "Wyoming", "Delaware"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere-in-2026", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere-in-2026.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere-in-2026.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/llc-for-digital-nomads-how-to-set-up-a-us-llc-from-anywhere-in-2026.jsonld"}}